Cave/Cavern Diving Without Proper Training?

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A Deceptively Easy Way to Die-
Cave or Cavern Diving without proper equipment and/or training.

This is a video that all open water divers might want to have a look at; especially if they are planning on visiting cave/cavern country in the near future. Cave diving and cavern diving safely requires special training and skills. Keep in mind that most of this information can be applied not only to cave and caverns, but also to other overhead environments including intact shipwrecks. This is “borrowed” from our friends at floridadiveconnection.com.

http://www.floridadiveconnection.com/a-deceptively-easy-way-to-die-should-be-watched-by-every-new-diver/

If you’re going to explore overhead environments, please do yourself and family members a favor by procuring the proper training and equipment first!

NOAA Welcomes 12th Operator to Blue Star Program

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NOAA’s Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary welcomes Conch Republic Divers of Tavernier, Fla. as the newest participant in the sanctuary’s Blue Star education and conservation program. Conch Republic Divers is the 12th Florida Keys diving  operator to earn this recognition.

Launched in 2009, Blue Star salutes charter companies that help protect the Florida Keys coral reef ecosystem by promoting responsible diving and snorkeling practices, and educating their patrons on the role humans play in reef health. Unlike some of the more global causes of reef decline — such as climate change — damage to reefs from diving and snorkeling is considered easily preventable through education and experience.

Home to the third-largest barrier coral reef in the world, the sanctuary’s protected waters attract millions of visitors each year and contribute an estimated $2 billion in annual tourist revenue. The reef’s close proximity to land and an abundance of boat operators in the Keys make it easily accessible to both novice snorkelers and seasoned divers.

“We are pleased to welcome Conch Republic Divers into the Blue Star program and commend their commitment to coral reef education,” said Sean Morton, sanctuary superintendent. “Through Blue Star, visitors and residents will gain a greater understanding of the importance and fragility of Florida Keys coral reefs, and the role they play in its conservation.”

Blue Star operators are required to attend training annually on issues affecting coral reefs, sanctuary regulations and coral reef etiquette. In turn, Blue Star operators educate their customers by incorporating the information into certification classes and dive briefings. They also must offer conservation-related dive courses and participate in activities such as fish counts and reef clean-ups. Operators are re-evaluated every year.

Here are the twelve Florida Keys diving operators that have earned this recognition:
Amy Slate’s Amoray Dive Resort – Key Largo, FL
Captain Hook’s Marina and Dive Center – Marathon, FL
Conch Republic Divers – Tavernier, FL
Dive Key West, Inc – Key West, FL
Florida Keys Dive Center – Tavernier, FL
Horizon Divers – Key Largo, FL
John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park – Key Largo, FL
Keys Diver and Snorkel Center – Key Largo, FL
Rainbow Reef Dive Center – Key Largo, FL
Rosa Del Mar Sailing – Key Largo, FL
Silent World – Key Largo, FL
Spree Expeditions, Inc. – Key West/Dry Tortugas, FL

Blue Star is funded in part by a grant from Mote Marine Laboratory’s “Protect Our Reef” Grants Program. Visit www.sanctuarybluestar.org for more information on the program and a list of recognized operators.

Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary protects 2,900 square nautical miles of critical marine habitat, including coral reef, hard bottom, sea grass meadow, mangrove communities and sand flats. NOAA and the State of Florida manage the sanctuary. Visit us at http://floridakeys.noaa.gov. 

NOAA’s mission is to understand and predict changes in the Earth’s environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and to conserve and manage our coastal and marine resources.

NOAA expedition to map fish spawning habitats west of Key West

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NOAA research expedition will map fish spawning habitats west of Key West

Cruise results will guide future management of Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary

Scientists from Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary and partner agencies will depart Key West Thursday aboard the NOAA Ship Nancy Foster to map fish spawning sites between Key West and the Dry Tortugas. Data collected on this 10-day research cruise will enhance scientific understanding of fish spawning locations, as well as fish movements in and around the sanctuary’s Tortugas Ecological Reserve.

“During the recent public regulatory review, many stakeholders said that we need to understand and protect our fishing spawning areas better,” said Sean Morton, sanctuary superintendent. “The scientific results of this cruise will help inform the public and guide management decisions as we continue to look at sanctuary marine zones and regulations.”

On the expedition, scientists will use multibeam and splitbeam sonar to provide high resolution maps of the seafloor, while fishery acoustic sonar simultaneously searches for fish, in order to determine what different spawning sites have in common. Divers will conduct visual surveys to validate the sonar scans, and use remotely operated vehicles to document observations at deeper depths.

The sanctuary’s marine zoning and regulatory review is a multi-year, public process to determine whether existing sanctuary boundaries, regulations, and marine zones are adequate to address threats to marine resources, and if new or expanded protection is needed to better address these threats.

Divers will also service and redeploy 74 acoustic receivers in the Tortugas Ecological Reserve, Dry Tortugas National Park and surrounding area. The network of receivers is used to detect acoustically tagged fish when they pass within range. It was instrumental in documenting the successes of both the reserve and the national park’s Research Natural Area, including the return of a historic mutton snapper spawning group at the reserve’s Riley’s Hump area. The receiver array and acoustic tag program is managed by NOAA and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

Research cruise participants are from NOAA’s Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, NOAA’s National Centers for Coastal Ocean Sciences, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Florida Department of Environmental Protection and the College of Charleston. Susan Kaiser, a seventh-grade science teacher from Reno, Nev., will be participating in the cruise as part of NOAA’s Teacher at Sea Program.

Support for the cruise is being provided by NOAA’s Ocean Service. Daily photo updates from scientists on the expedition will be posted on the sanctuary’s Facebook page, www.facebook.com/floridakeysnoaagov.

The Dry Tortugas region, located approximately 70 miles west of Key West, contains diverse and nationally-significant underwater habitats, including seagrass beds and deep coral reef habitats. In 2001, the sanctuary designated the 151-square nautical mile Tortugas Ecological Reserve to protect habitat and biodiversity, allowing the area to evolve naturally with minimal human influences. Fishing and anchoring are prohibited throughout the reserve,and boating and diving is prohibited in the reserve’s southern section without a permit.

NOAA’s Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary protects 2,900 square nautical miles of critical marine habitat, including coral reef, hard bottom, sea grass meadow, mangrove communities and sand flats. NOAA and the state of Florida manage the sanctuary. Visit us at floridakeys.noaa.gov or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/floridakeysnoaagov.

Florida Divers Have New Wreck Off of Sanibel Island

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Florida divers have a new shipwreck to explore. The World War II ship the USS Mohawk was scuttled 28 miles off the coast of Sanibel Island on July 2. It is now an artificial reef for Florida divers and anglers and is a veterans memorial.

The county’s Marine Services Program and Reefmakers LLC, a Key West company that specializes in sinking ships as artificial reefs, was scheduled to scuttle the 165-foot World War II Coast Guard cutter at 11 a.m., but it was delayed by nearly two hours.

Just before 1 p.m., there was a loud explosion, debris flew off the ship and it slowly descended to the bottom of the Gulf. It took just three minutes to sink below the water line.

“It’s a big day for us. We’ve done artificial reefs in the past, but we’ve done nothing that was like this. We’ve got the opportunity to take an old historic vessel and give her a final duty that’s fitting of the service that she’s given to this country,” said Steve Boutelle, with Lee County Natural Resources.

Joe Weatherby and his team spent two months in Fort Myers Beach preparing the rusted ship, removing hazardous oil and readying her for her final destination.

“She’s still got her propellers, she’s still got her guns and her life raft back on board and you never ever, ever see artificial reefs going into the sea looking like this,” Weatherby said.

Six charges were placed on the USS Mohawk and detonated at different times, allowing thousands of gallons of water to rush into the ship at once so that it will sit right side up.

Sunday morning crews towed the ship to its final destination and anchored it in preparation for the sinking.

“They spent a lot of time and a lot of money getting the ship ready environmentally – making sure it’s clean, there’s no oil leaking or any problems with that. The guns were taken off, decommissioned, and put back on. The props were put back on, so from a diver’s perceptive, it’s as if the boat did sink accidentally and it looks like it was operating when it went down,” explained Jeff Miller, President of the Coastal Conservation Association.

Recent reports from divers indicate that there are already as many as 5 goliath grouper calling this new wreck home.

Busy Month For Florida Diving

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Hey South Florida divers! July is going to be an active month for Florida Diving.

It looks like you all have an amazing couple of weeks ahead of you. In addition to the annual pilgrammage for many of us to celebrate the underwater cockroach, there is the Ultimate Diver Challenge and an underwater race.

Here are the Florida diving events, as well as their web sites to get more information.

1- The Ultimate Diver Challenge in Palm Beach County – July 20-31
http://www.ultimatediverchallenge.com/
2- Formula H2O Race in Pompano – July 22
http://wreckracingleague.com/?page_id=2636
3- Lobster Mini-Season- Statewide- July 25 & 26
http://myfwc.com/fishing/saltwater/recreational/lobster/

Be sure to notify Scuba Sport Magazine when you hear of unique Florida diving events. We’ ll try to spread the word for you!

 

NOAA Proclaims Mermaids Not Real!!!

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NOAA Proclaims Mermaids Not Real!!!

This may come as a surprise to many of you, but mermaids aren’t real. The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has debunked the existence of the legendary half-woman, half-fish creatures.

NOAA’s National Ocean Service came out against the reality of mermaids after a documentary-style science fiction program on the Discovery Channel’s Animal Planet suggested in May that the body of a mermaid had been found on a beach.

Of course, it wasn’t. But the program prompted public inquiries to NOAA, which more commonly deals with questions about weather, water and solar storms.

“No evidence of aquatic humanoids has ever been found,” the agency wrote on its “Ocean Facts” page here

Legends about mermaids have been around since the Stone Age, as shown in cave paintings of magical female figures made 30,000 years ago, NOAA said.

“But are mermaids real? No evidence of aquatic humanoids has ever been found. Why, then, do they occupy the collective unconscious of nearly all seafaring peoples? That’s a question best left to historians, philosophers and anthropologists.”

Ben Sherman, a spokesman for the Ocean Service, said the item on mermaids was posted June 27 in response to queries about Discovery’s fictional “documentary.” There was also interest on a couple of NOAA’s Facebook pages, he said in an email to Reuters on Thursday.

“This Ocean Fact received little attention until the Discovery News Channel reposted it with commentary on June 29,” Sherman wrote.

The Discovery site – here – suggested NOAA responded because Discovery’s documentary-style show, “Mermaids: The Body Found,” had painted a convincing picture of the existence of mermaids.

“The show was an ‘X-Files’ type fanciful mix of state-of-the-art computer generated animation, historical fact, conspiracy theory and real and faked footage sprinkled with enough bits of scientific speculation and real science to make it seem plausible,” the Discovery site said.

In fact, NOAA scientists recorded a mysterious sound in the Pacific Ocean in 1997 that they called “The Bloop,” and the source of this sound has never been identified. The Discovery program mentioned this finding. Listen to “The Bloop” here

For conspiracy theorists, there is a website called believeinmermaids.com/ that purports to show that it has been “seized” by the Justice Department and Homeland Security Investigations.

“It is a hoax,” wrote Ross Feinstein of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, which oversees the seizure of web sites engaged in criminal activity. Claiming that mermaids exist is not a crime, Feinstein said by telephone.

“This operation is focused on counterfeit goods and piracy, not freedom of speech – including those regarding the existence of mermaids,” he wrote. “It is not our agency’s position to judge whether or not mermaids exist or don’t exist. … Our agency has no open investigations into any issues regarding mermaids.”

This isn’t from The Onion guys and Gals. This REALLY is our tax dollars at work!

SEAduction Becomes Key West Divings First “Green” Commercial Charter

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SEAduction Becomes Key West Divings First “Green” Commercial Charter

SEAduction® Dive Center fueled the Starfish Enterprise II with B100 biodiesel today for the first time. The fuel provided by Biodiesel of Marathon is recycled from cooking oils used by several restaurants in the community. The fuel is a 100% recycled, completely biodegradable and non-toxic product. It releases fewer carcinogens and other toxic by-products and the accidental minor spills that are typical with repetitive refueling operations are not harmful to the environment – in short, it is a very environmentally sound decision.

SEAduction® Group President, Mike Ange , states that ”the fuel choice was the right one for the environment. We estimate that it will cost us a few dollars more per run but we look forward to some benefits as well as the obvious ones key west diving will receive from protecting our most precious natural resource. The bio fuel lacks the offensive smell and smoke typical of petroleum based diesel fuels, which we believe will decrease the incident rate of seasickness on our vessels. The obnoxious smell of diesel is frequently credited with accelerating the onset of motion sickness – in short, the petroleum based exhaust is toxic and the body knows it so it responds accordingly. Our research indicates that the B100 fuel should eliminate this problem almost entirely and we look forward to seeing how much this change will increase the comfort and enjoyment of our passengers.” SEAduction’s smaller boat will return from dry-dock this week and will also run on B100 fuel.

This morning’s run was the culmination of over 6 months of research and legwork completed by two of SEAduction’s associates Bill Stone and Corbin McKeon who volunteered this time because they wanted to make a difference. Ange also states that ”From the Carolina’s to Key West and in programs conducted around the world SEAduction and our employees have always been trend setters and we hope we have started another trend. I want to see Key West Diving operations take this positive step to protect our environment and decrease our country’s dependence on foreign oil. My hat is off to our staff for implementing this exciting change and we look forward to sharing our information and experiences with any of the local operators who want to make a difference as well.”

On our official first B100 run this morning the crew only reported one issue – the boat had a very slight odor of French fries, making them all hungry. Ange says ”I can honestly say that in 25 years I have never heard anyone say that diesel exhaust fumes made them hungry before today!”

DEMA and DAN Team Up For Lionfish PSA

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It seems that you can’t dive in Florida, Bahamas or Caribbean without seeing a lionfish almost every time you submerge. Lionfish are an invasive species spreading throughout the Atlantic coast, the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean.

DAN and DEMA have teamed up to create a public safety announcement providing first aid instructions for lionfish stings.

To see the PSA, click here

 

Loggerheads Nesting Earlier This Year

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The first loggerhead sea turtle nest of the year in Georgia has been reported on Atlantic coast, authorities said. The nest was found this week on Cumberland Island, National Park Service biologist Doug Hoffman told The Savannah Morning News. 

“Loggerhead nesting in April is rare in Georgia”, said Mark Dodd, a biologist with the Department of Natural Resources and the Georgia sea turtle coordinator. He said only one previous April nest has been recorded, on Ossabaw Island in 2001.

Loggerhead nests have already been reported this year in Florida as far north as St. Augustine. In Georgia, nesting is typically expected from May through July, with hatching continuing into October.

Last year was record setting for loggerheads with close to 2,000 nests identified on Georgia beaches. The rise in nests is a positive sign in the recovery of the threatened species, but it also means there are likely more turtles in Georgia waters so more can be hit by boats or caught in shrimp nets, authorities said.

Last week, 13 turtles washed up dead on Georgia beaches, continuing a trend of a greater than usual number of such strandings this spring. The total is 50 so far this year compared to 19 by the same time last year. “Seven of those dead loggerheads last week had injuries consistent with being struck by a boat,” Dodd said.

South Florida Lionfish Shootout May 12

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Scuba Sport Magazine for a number of reasons, supports organizations that act on attempting to eradicate the lionfish from Florida and the Caribbean. Here is another opportunity to help. By the way, Lionfish TASTE DELICIOUS!

On May 12, 2012 in the afternoon, American Dive Center out of Pompano Beach, Florida is facing off against Boynton Beach Dive Center in a Lionfish Shoot out. We are having a pot Luck BBQ afterwards. There are still spaces available on both teams so call which ever is local to you and join the fun. 954-346-0174